Quote Originally Posted by zerazax
G80 had a smaller die size, used less power and generated less heat and we didn't see a GX2 card with that core until the G92 at 65nm so I doubt we will see GT200 in a GX2 card form until 40nm at least
Nah. I'm not buying that. You think Nvidia is just going to stand by while AMD takes the lead until they get to 40nm? No way. The 7950GX2 was a 7900GT sandwich at 90nm. There was no die shrink necessary to make that. Sure. Cooling will be a problem, but it always is with the GX2 cards. It's not like Nvidia has to even engineer a new card. They just need to stick two cards together and put them on a single PCIe slot. Nvidia is going to take back their lead no later than spring 2009 and a GX2 card is precisely how they are going to win it back.

The fact is you can only get so much out of CF/SLI before diminishing returns kicks in. It's basically a hack introduced by 3DFX. We're lucky it works at all. Now maybe the 4870x2 is going to revolutionize the world of GPUs by changing that. But I'll believe that when I see it. Even in a post 4870x2 world Nvidia is still going to have the advantage in a sense because I doubt the 4870 is going to be faster than a GTX280 at 65nm and it's even less likely when the GTX280 is shrunk down to 55nm. We can all enjoy AMD's victory this summer, but they are going to have to pull out quite a few rabbits if they want to keep it.